* Indian citizens with H-1B visas were sought-after marriage prospects * Marriage prized for financial security, quality of life * Trump administration's policy changes creating uncertainty * Some families now looking to countries including UK and Canada for potential matches By Abinaya V, Rishika Sadam and Urvi Dugar BENGALURU/HYDERABAD, Oct 7 (Reuters) – Sidhi Sharma wanted to marry an Indian citizen with a high-flying job in the United States. But the 19-year-old medical student from India's northern Haryana state dropped the idea after seeing recent headlines about U.S. President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. "I had always dreamed of settling in the U.S. after marriage," she said, without elaborating on her reasons. "Trump has shut the door for me." Tighter U.S. immigration pol
US visa no longer a passport to love for Indians after Trump H

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